E
Eun-Sook Cho
Researcher at University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey
Publications - 12
Citations - 3622
Eun-Sook Cho is an academic researcher from University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey. The author has contributed to research in topics: Myelin & Multiple sclerosis. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 12 publications receiving 3501 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The AIDS dementia complex: II. Neuropathology
TL;DR: The AIDS dementia complex is established as a distinct clinical and pathological entity and, together with accumulating virological evidence, suggests that it is caused by direct LAV/HTLV‐III brain infection.
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Multiple sclerosis: remyelination of nascent lesions
TL;DR: The study provides new evidence that both oligodendrocytes and myelin are destroyed in new lesions, that this activity ceases completely in many lesions within a few weeks, and that remyelination frequently ensues following repopulation of the plaque by oligod endodermictes.
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Cerebral toxoplasmosis complicating the acquired immune deficiency syndrome: clinical and neuropathological findings in 27 patients.
Bradford A. Navia,Carol K. Petito,Jonathan W. M. Gold,Eun-Sook Cho,Barry D. Jordan,Richard W. Price +5 more
TL;DR: Clinical, neuroradiological, and serological findings in 27 patients with cerebral toxoplasmosis complicating the acquired immune deficiency syndrome, and double‐dose contrast administration and preliminary experience with magnetic resonance imaging suggested that these techniques were superior to standard CT scanning in detecting Toxoplasma lesions.
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Neuropathology of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS): an autopsy review.
TL;DR: This survey shows that neuropathologic complications of AIDS are frequent and Infections are the most common complication and are caused by probable LAV/HTLV-III infection, or by opportunistic organisms.
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Immunopathology of secondary‐progressive multiple sclerosis
John W. Prineas,Eunice E. Kwon,Eun-Sook Cho,Leroy R. Sharer,Michael Barnett,Emilia L. Oleszak,Brad E. Hoffman,Bryan Paul Morgan +7 more
TL;DR: Findings suggest that slowly expanding lesions (progressive plaques), in which ongoing myelin breakdown occurs in the absence of florid perivascular cell cuffing or other histological signs of acute inflammation, contribute to disease progression in cases of secondary‐progressive multiple sclerosis.